Subject: Lyr Add: WRAP ME UP IN MY TARPAULIN JACKET From: Martin _Ryan Date: 08 Dec 99 - 07:57 PM I picked up an old (no date - probably 1930's) booklet called Walton's "181 Best International Songs". It includes the following: WRAP ME UP IN MY TARPAULIN JACKET
Then get six jolly loyal fore top men
Then two white holly tablets obtain, sir, Any one seen/heard it before? I looks like a glee club number - but the connection back to The Unfortunate Rake and, maybe, forward to Fiddler's Green is curious. Anyone got a tune? Regards |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: kendall Date: 08 Dec 99 - 08:57 PM I have the tune, and a slightly different set of words. Yhat one sounds like it was made by a landsman. I dont know what a holy tablet is, but, a holy stone was used to sand the decks. A smaller one was called a prayer book. If you call me I'll give you the tune. |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: alison Date: 08 Dec 99 - 09:13 PM sing me the tune as a voicemail through mediaring Kendall and I'll post it.... slainte alison |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: MMario Date: 08 Dec 99 - 09:34 PM any one else see a resemblence to "rosin the bow"? |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Bruce O. Date: 08 Dec 99 - 09:49 PM An ABC of "The Unfortunate Rake", 1808, is T060 in file T1 on my website. An earlier copy, c 1805, differs little. www.erols.com/olsonw |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Martin _Ryan Date: 09 Dec 99 - 02:53 AM Kendall In fact its "holly stones" in the text - which is stranger still! Thanks for help so far. Regards |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: John in Brisbane Date: 09 Dec 99 - 05:15 AM In my impressionable youth I believe that I heard the late Declan Affley sing this at a National Folk Festival in Melbourne in 1972/3? There was an LP produced of the main concert, but I don't have a copy. While I have cartainly heard the Tarpaulin version, it is possible that Declan sang Fiddlers Green that night. As I recall the two tunes are very similar - if not clones. Bob Bolton may have a copy of the LP. |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Liz the Squeak Date: 09 Dec 99 - 05:23 AM A tarpaulin jacket and holy stones is the sailor equivalent of a shroud and concrete overcoat. The tarpaulin was used to wrap a body for burial at sea, the 'holly' or holy stones to weight it, so that when the poor unfortunate started to swell with internal gasses, as these things do, wouldn't float to the surface again and create more legends of sailors haunting the sea.... LTS |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: MMario Date: 09 Dec 99 - 08:49 AM according to an old friend of mine - who spent many a year on and under the sea...."holy stones" is SPELLED "holly stones" --just another one of those lovely english the way we don't speak it things. [and he CLAIMS that it is probably derived from "oily stones"] |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: kendall Date: 09 Dec 99 - 01:29 PM It is the same tune as Rosin the Beau, but only the A part..no refrain I heard Buryl Ives sing this 40 years ago. He also sang holly stones, but, I stick to my story..HOLY stone makes more sense, becaue the smaller one was called a prayer book. I dont just read about going to sea...I've been there, and, I know that landlubbers like Oscar Brand have really mucked up the lingo. Anyway, believe me, it is HOLY stone. |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Bruce O. Date: 09 Dec 99 - 01:57 PM Anyone have 'The Penguin Australian Songbook", 1964? Evidently "Tarpaulin Jacket" and "Rosin the Beau" are identified there as the same tune. [Note from Randolph/ Legman, 'Roll me in your arms', #18] |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Micca Date: 09 Dec 99 - 08:07 PM MMario, Let a Certificated Able Seaman explain, It is (or was) spelled holly stones but pronounced Holy stones, but not because of "Holy as in saintly" but as in "Holy as in full of holes", they were bade from machine-cut blocks of Pumice like abraisive-like material and were used (certainly when I served in the mid-60s) as a means of removings damaged and dead wood and foot marks from sun-bleached wooden decks. A Holly stone looked like a large squeezey Mop you know the kind, with a large square of sponge at the bottom with a handle that folds it to squeeze out the water, except ,of course, the stone did not bend.It was propelled in front of you like a broom and weighed several pounds and used dry for coarse work and wet for fine."The Prayer book" was a small version for doing akward corners. It was frequently in use on wooden decked Passenger ships and cruise liners. Needless to say this was a very tedious job and was given as "day work" to Deckies on long trips along with in-board ship painting and maintenance. Only worn and used-up Holy stones (because along with the weight they became saturated with water and any junk metal was used as a sinker for a corpse. The Ships Carpenter, usually the best at canvas sewing, did the job and it was a point of honour that the "Tarpaulin jacket" fitted like a second skin. The final stitch, by tradition, goes through the canvas and the nose of the corpse and a large loop of the tarred sail twine left sticking up so that the captain can check there actually is a corpse inside. The stitcher-up is paid a special fee for this. |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: kendall Date: 09 Dec 99 - 10:48 PM You got it Micca...nuff said (except, if you still want to argue, check your dictionary) |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: John in Brisbane Date: 10 Dec 99 - 12:01 AM Bruce, I'm sure you're right - I don't recall the reference. I'll check it out over the weekend. Regards, John |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Bruce O. Date: 10 Dec 99 - 02:02 AM John, mention should be on p. 110. Legman isn't clear as to whether "Lady Monroe" is printed there. "Moll Roe" and "My name is old Hewson the Cobbler" are a bit similar to "Rosin the Beau". Anyone want an ABC of the tune that S. P. Bayard though might be that from which "Rosin the Beau" was derived?
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Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: John in Brisbane Date: 10 Dec 99 - 03:09 AM Bruce, I wonder if he is referring to Vol II which I don't know nearly as well, but I'll check over the weekend. Regards, John |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: bseed(charleskratz) Date: 10 Dec 99 - 03:26 AM Skip Henderson sings the song on his CD "Billy Bones and Other Ditties"--a fine album it is. --seed |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Bruce O. Date: 10 Dec 99 - 03:43 AM John, Legman doesn't cite a vouume number. |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: kendall Date: 10 Dec 99 - 08:29 AM Actually, Tarpaulin jacket is close to Rosin, but, there is a slight difference. Alison, I no longer have mediaring. The reception sucked so I dumped it. Been thinking about netmeeting, but, Jon says it too has its problems. |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Frank Hamilton Date: 10 Dec 99 - 03:51 PM The song is found in the American Songbag by Carl Sandburg. "One of several in the R. W. Gordon collection, this version (A) is from Frank Haworth of the British Club, Havan, Cuiba, while (B) {The Handsome Young Airman} is from Abbe Niles who comments on how landlubber songs often are in active duty on the high seas and vice versa.'Any living tune is a jack of all trades. This variant of Tarpaulin ajcket ten years ago on the flying fields was current among men who had never heard its original'" Sandburg's Songbag came out in 1927. Frank |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: lamarca Date: 10 Dec 99 - 04:36 PM Bruce and John, I have both volumes of the Australian Book of Penguin Folksongs at home, and will check them this evening... |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Bruce O. Date: 10 Dec 99 - 05:16 PM Thanks lamarca. Now I'me even more envious of you. I haven't managed to find that or Firth's 'Naval Songs and Ballads' on the booksellers websites. |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Bruce O. Date: 10 Dec 99 - 10:01 PM Check title carefully, there's more than one 'Penguin Australian xxxx' (book of songs). The right one should be edited by J. S. Manifold. Legman's date may be wrong, as I can only find a 1976 date for the book. |
Subject: Lyr Add: WRAP ME UP IN MY TARPAULIN JACKET From: Lohouse8@aol.com Date: 10 Dec 99 - 10:56 PM From the Burl Ives songbook "Seasongs" circa 1956 as follows. I have sheet music w/chords. May be related to Rosin the Beau, but that is not the same tune as recorded by Ives. WRAP ME UP IN MY TARPAULIN JACKET Oh, had I the wings of a turtle dove, so high on my pinions I'd fly. Slap! Bang! To the heart of my Polly love, And in her dear arms I would die. CHORUS: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket, and say a poor duffer's laid low. Send for six jolly seamen to carry me, With steps mournful, solemn and slow. Oh, then let them send for two holystones, and place them at head and at toe, Upon them write this inscription, "Here lies a poor dufffer below." Chorus: Then send for six jolly foretopmen, and let them a-rollicking go, And in heaping two gallon measures, Drink the health of the duffer below. Chorus: Line Breaks <br> added. |
Subject: Lyr Add: WRAP ME UP IN MY TARPAULIN JACKET From: Frank Maher Date: 10 Dec 99 - 11:41 PM This is a Frank Crumit Version from 1935 WRAP ME UP IN MY TARPAULIN JACKET A tall stalwart lancer lay dying, And as on his deathbed he lay, To his friends who around him were sighing, These last dying words he did say,
CHORUS:
Had I the wings of a little dove,
Then get you two little white tombstones,
And get you six brandies and sodas,
And then in the calm of the twilight, |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: John Nolan Date: 11 Dec 99 - 09:57 AM A couple (or maybe three) decades ago BBC TV ran a documentary on Admiral Benbow and Tarpaulin Jacket was one of the accompanying songs. Does this programme ring a bell with anyone, and has it ever been re-run? |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Micca Date: 11 Dec 99 - 11:01 AM Hi John, I remember it too, with great affection, as it contained most if not all variants of the Admiral Benbow songs. No, I do not think it has been re-run. I think it was late 60s or early 70s, as I remember I was living at my mothers at the time and moved out in 1972. |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Bruce O. Date: 11 Dec 99 - 03:43 PM There's no tune direction on the broadside "Tarpauling Jacket" (Harding B 25(1883) on the Bodley Ballads website. The song is probably 100 years after Benbow's time. It may take a couple of weeks before I get a copy of the tune that S. P. Bayard said (Dance to the Fiddle, March to the Fife, #620) was probably the original version (1742) of "Rosin the Beau". I've had an offer to send it by s-mail from Scotland, but am still hopeing someone will do it in ABC for me. |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Martin _Ryan Date: 11 Dec 99 - 05:56 PM Great stuff! Now - what about "Lady Monroe"? Regards |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Joe Offer Date: 11 Dec 99 - 06:03 PM Dunno, Martin. Penguin Australian Song Book says it's "unprintable." That presents a challenge we can't resist, doesn't it? -Joe Offer, off hunting- |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Bruce O. Date: 11 Dec 99 - 11:43 PM I, too, would love to see "Lady Monroe", as it is possibly related to a lost Irish song "Moll Roe in the Morning", whose tune was used in an Irish ballad opera of 1748, and in 1760 for a song on the death of the French Admiral Thurot at Sole Bay (after his capture of Carrickfergus Castle). I'd also like the see the ballad about the capture of Carrickfergus, whose tune is known as; Irish- "Carrickfergus" and "The Dargle"; Scots- "The Small Pin Cushion"; English- "Haste to the Wedding". A note in Eloise Linscott's New England songs is obviously completely screwed up, as she has Thurot writing the ballad on the Isle of Man (while the English are scouring the Irish Sea looking for him).
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Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Bruce O. Date: 12 Dec 99 - 12:12 AM In the Levy sheet music collection (Mudcat's Links) we see copies of 1838 of "Rosin the Beau", and later 'Beau' sometimes becomes "Bow'.
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Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: lamarca Date: 12 Dec 99 - 12:45 PM Well, Joe - you beat me to it. I obtained both the first and second Australian Book of Penguin Folksong books (first edited by John Manifold, of "Griesley Wife" fame, second by Bill Scott) from Da Capo music bookstore in Sydney(?). Having never been Down Under, it was a strange and marvelous thing to me that I could find all these neat books of Aussie folksongs through ABEbooks.com and actually order them overseas using my trusty VISA card to handle the international exchange rates. After an initial binge of buying all sorts of fascinating collections, I've tried to settle down and be a bit more restrained in my book binge habits, with mixed success. Now if I could only find volume 1 of Bronson... |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: dick greenhaus Date: 12 Dec 99 - 01:35 PM Tarpaulin Jacket is one of the most-parodied songs in existence. It's been used by sailors, skiers, spelunkers, soldiers, paratroopers...anyone who wants to stress the dangers in his/her avocation or profession. My favorite is The Dying Airman (in the DT), but there are lots. The tune I've always heard (well, it seems like always) was a lot closer to Botany Bay than to Rosin the Beau. |
Subject: Lyr Add: TARPAULING JACKET From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 16 Oct 03 - 09:07 PM Lyr. Add: TARPAULING JACKET ^^ I am a young jolly brisk sailor, Delights in all manner of sport, When I'm in liquor I'm mellow, The girls I then merrily court. But love is surrounded with trouble, And put such strange thoughts in my head, Is it not a terrible story, That love it should strike me stone dead. Have not I been in stormy weather, Have not I been in heat and in cold, Have not I been with many a brave fellow That has ventured his honour for gold. But now the wars are all over, And I am safe landed on shore, The devil shall have me forever, If ever I enter any more. Some where is the girl that will love me, And lay with me this very night, Come jig it away with the fiddle, A country dance or hornpipe. Let the weakest not go with the strongest, But let them be equally yok'd, For the strongest will last out the longest, The jacket ne'er values the stroke. Here's health to my friends and acquaintances, When death for me it doth come, And let them behave in their station, And send me a cask of good rum. Let it be good royal stingo, With three barrels of beer, To make my friends the more welcome, When they meet me at derry down fair. Let there be six sailors to carry me, Let them be damnable* drunk, And as they are going to bury me, Let them fall down with my trunk. Let there be no sighing or sobbing, But one single favour I crave, Take me up in a tarpauling jacket, And fiddle and dance to my grave. A sailors' version of this grand old song complex that leads to "The Streets of Laredo", and one of the best of the whole lot. *damndable in the sheet. Bodleian Ballads, Harding B 25(1883), c. 1819-1844, J. Pitts printer, London. |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Amos Date: 16 Oct 03 - 10:11 PM The version first posted by Martin Ryan sounds like an alteration (not for the better) of the version recorded by Burl Ives, which includes the phrase "here lies a poor duffer below". I have never heard of an individual being called a buffer. A |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Malcolm Douglas Date: 16 Oct 03 - 10:28 PM "Old buffer" is a common term in the UK. |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Bob Bolton Date: 16 Oct 03 - 10:31 PM G'day Amos, Buffer is quite common English for "A silly, or incompetent, old man" ... it may not have leaked into American. Regards, Bob Bolton |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Bob Bolton Date: 16 Oct 03 - 11:44 PM G'day Martin Ryan, Joe Offer & BruceO, I must have skirted past this thread first time round - and not read too far back the second! (Er ... g'day Malcolm, I must have started my posting about when you sent yours!). Anyway, John Manifold's remarks about the "unprintable" Lady Monroe would be lifted from John Meredith's notes on a song he wrote to use the tune ... published in Singabout, Journal of Australian Folk Song ... around 1960. I'll look it up when I get home. Merro sang Lady Monroe to me in the early '60s ... it was only a single verse and chorus ... and somewhat less "unprintable" by today's standards than the '60s in Australia. As I remember it: Monroe has a foot for a stocking, Monroe has a foot for a shoe, Monroe has a cunt for a sailor, but not for a bastard like you! So it's over the hedges and ditches, Up to your bollocks in snow. A prick frozen fast to your britches - Would rise to the cunt of Monroe. I don't remember there being any more ... but I could suss out if any of my friends who have access to the Meredith Collection tapes and papers know of any more. (I doubt that we are going to find anything of deep literary significance ... but folklore should recognise the whole field!) Regards, Bob Bolton |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Amos Date: 17 Oct 03 - 12:48 AM Darn. put my foot in it again, did I?? Fancy that! Here in the US, except for perhaps some regional dialects, a buffer is just a technical term for a memory register or a general term for something dividing two other things, such as a a buffer state. Well, ya learn something every day! Thanks for the friendly correction! A |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: dick greenhaus Date: 17 Oct 03 - 01:01 AM There's an interesting aspect to this song. While just about everyone I know has heard it or knows a version, the only recording I was able to find was by Burl Ives a half-century or so ago. Oral trad? |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Keith A of Hertford Date: 17 Oct 03 - 02:08 PM I thought that a Buffer was a member of The Buffs,nickname of the 3rd Foot , East Kents. |
Subject: RE: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Herga Kitty Date: 17 Oct 03 - 04:04 PM I'm a bit surprised (because it's been harvested for the DT)that no-one has yet mentioned the Morris dancing version perpetrated by Herga Morris in the mid 1970s: Wrap me up in me bells and me baldrick No more in the pubs I'll be seen Just tell me old side mates I'm taking a slide mates And I'll see you someday when me bells have turned green. Kitty |
Subject: Lyr Add: Cornpicker's Lament (Australian) From: Bob Bolton Date: 20 Oct 03 - 07:53 PM G'day again, I guess I'm just adding this to round out the posting, 5 days above - where, after 4 years of neglect of the request, I posted the lyric of Lady Monroe. This is the song John Meredith wrote, of his brief experience of picking corn (maize) in Queensland during his rambles by pushbike, before settling in Sydney - after WW II. As his notes (below) say, he wrote it to make use of the tune he had collected to a song he definitely could not print back in the 1950s. I notice that the spelling has changed from "Munro" to "Monroe" ... perhaps an unconcious acknowledgement of Marilyn? I don't remember Merro singing any more than the single verse and chorus , quoted above, of Lady Monroe/Munro - but I'll chase up with friends researching the Meredith Collection at the National Library - to see if he recorded any more. As it stands, I suspect the single bawdy verse and chorus may have survived as a musician's private words to a popular waltz tune at "bush dances". (Merro had noted that a number of bawdy songs were often requested - as tunes only - at dances, while: "the men danced around with silly smirks on their faces ..."!) It is worth noting that the Lady Monroe/Munro tune has a far more demure identity as The Gentle Maiden! Regards, Bob Bolton THE CORNPICKER'S LAMENT "Lady Munro", an unprintable ballad, was recently collected from a shearer. The tune is a variant of the evergreen "Rosin the Beau". Words: John Meredith. Air: "Lady Munro". Come all you young city-born slickers, Who want to try life in the rough, Stay away from the Atherton corn farms And the job that I found was too tough. Chorus: Then away from the Atherton farmlands I'm off at the crack of the dawn; I'll take any job you can offer, But I'll never more try picking corn. It's hard to pick corn like a champion When your husker has blistered your mitts. And your horse always wants to be moving Till you just about start throwing fits. And you can't concentrate on your picking When your shirt's full of sharp Roger seeds, And the burrs in your pants are all prickly And you can't see your cart for the weeds. When you've got a shirt full of weevils, Then corn-picking starts to get hard, And every third cob when you toss it Just misses the cart by a yard. But after a while it gets easy, And you reckon you've got the game licked – Two ton a day will be easy, But you're too late – the flaming crop's picked. Singabout, Vol 1, No. 2, Autumn (March - May) 1956, p. 7 Bush Music Club, Woolloomooloo, Sydney |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: open mike Date: 21 Oct 03 - 01:58 AM kitty -- the lyrics from the morris seem to follow the song Fiddler's Green: "Wrap me up in me oil skin and jumper No more by ther docks i'll be found Just tell me old ship mates I'm takin' a trip mates And I'll see you someday On Fiddler's Green" |
Subject: Lyr Add: WRAP ME UP IN MY OLD STABLE JACKET From: GUEST,A Stalwart Lancer Date: 20 Nov 04 - 09:12 AM To all, Greeting....just to add grist to the mill, there exists another version of this famous tune/song and it is sung by the Queen's Royal Lancers at every formal dining function in all the Regiment's Messes. The tune can be heard on the Royal Lancers Band CD called 'Into History'. As far as I'm aware the Regiment has sung this song since before the Indian Mutiny and proudly continues to do so today. Here are the words: "A tall stalwart Lancer lay dying, And as on his deathbed he lay, To his friends who around him were sighing, These last dying words he did say, CHORUS: Wrap me up in my old stable jacket, And say a poor buffer lies low, And six stalwart Lancers shall carry me, With steps, solemn, mournful and slow. Had I the wings of a white dove, Far away, far away, would I fly, Straight for the arms of my true love, And there would I lay me and die. CHORUS Then get you two little white tombstones, Put them one at my head and my toe, And get you a penknife and scratch there, Here lies a poor buffer below, CHORUS And get you six brandies and sodas, And set them all out in a row, And get you six jolly good Lancers, To drink to this buffer below. CHORUS And then in the calm of the twilight, When the soft winds are whispering low, And the darkening shadows are falling, Sometimes think of this buffer below. CHORUS" It's obviously an adaptation of the orignal, but I think you're far more likely to hear it being sung by the 700 members of the Regiment than on board any ship these days...... Hope this proves of interest to somebody. Warm Regards. GW Brown (A still serving Lancer) |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: George Seto - af221@chebucto.ns.ca Date: 20 Nov 04 - 01:44 PM Thanks for both the lyrics and information. Wonderful bit of information. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 20 Nov 04 - 02:16 PM Good to get these songs written down before they are lost. Other Lancer songs would be welcome. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: GUEST,DMcF Date: 21 Nov 04 - 12:05 PM Our band currently do a rocked up version of 'Rakish Young Fellow' (Roud 829. Sharp 228) We've worked on it starting out from the unaccompianied version on Walter Pardon's 'A World Without Horses' One verse runs... I'll never go sobbing and sighing – but just one last favour I crave Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket – and fiddle and dance round my grave ...good to see so many variations of more or less the same verses in this thread. Very interesting read - ta! Duncan |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Wrap me up in my tarpaulin jacket???? From: Lighter Date: 21 Nov 04 - 09:56 PM Concerning the above interest in "Moll Roe/Lady Monroe," etc., nearly 100 years ago P. W. Joyce gave the following unexplained couplet in his book "English as we Speak It in Ireland" : Wor you at the fair - did you see the wonder? Did you see Moll Roe riding on the gander? Joyce, better known for his "Old Irish Music," was not the sort to allude to a bawdy ballad, and the goose-riding Moll sounds like a different person altogether. But was there more to this rhyme? What's it about, anyway? |
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